Answer
Workers
Explanation:
The protection toward 'Vulnerable persons' according to The Common Rule (45 CFR 46, Sub part A) refers to the type of protection granted to Researches subjects that are not in their prime physical mental conditions. (For example, pregnant women or underage subjects)
'Workers' tend to be in adult age (older than 18) ,and considered to be healthy and psychologically sound (otherwise they will not be hired by their employers). Therefore, this group is not considered as 'vulnerable persons' and do not have specific protection form the common rule.
It's dangerous. It chokes wetlands and other areas. In wetlands, fish (and other creatures) use the area to hide, feed, mate, and produce the next generation. If it becomes a tangle of roots, the fish cannot exist there. Animals can no longer penetrate the area. On drier lands, it chokes out plants which starves the animals who would prefer to eat plants native to their area. Overall, the biodiversity is decreased. Think of it as a rapidly spreading killing machine. Where hundreds existed before it, but now there's only one.
<span>Homosexutality was removed from the dsm system as a psychological disorder in 1973 because it was no longer seen as a sociopathic personality disturbance (which it was a classified as in 1952) after several APA committees and deliberative bodies then reviewed and accepted the view that homosexuality was not a mental disorder.</span>
Answer:
double marginality
Explanation:
Double marginality in the context of the United States refers to the situation of minority officers ( African American or Hispanic ) that are seemed from the eyes of suspicion from both sides. The members from the minority community and their white colleagues both look them suspiciously. The white colleagues believed that these minority officers would favor their race and give better treatment to the minority group they belong, at the same time their minority groups labeled them as traitors to their ethnicity and race.
Answer:
The court of Versailles was the centre of political power in France from 1682, when Louis XIV moved from Paris, until the royal family was forced to return to the capital in October 1789 after the beginning of the French Revolution.